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Gallican
[ gal-i-kuhn ]
adjective
- Gallic; French.
- Ecclesiastical.
- of or relating to the Roman Catholic Church in France.
- of or relating to a school or party of French Roman Catholics, before 1870, advocating the restriction of papal authority in favor of the authority of general councils, the bishops, and temporal rulers.
Gallican
/ ˈɡælɪkən /
adjective
- of or relating to Gallicanism
noun
- an upholder of Gallicanism
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Word History and Origins
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Example Sentences
All those men were open infidels; and their attacks on religion, such as they saw it before them, roused the Gallican church.
From Project Gutenberg
But if this were the state of the Anglican Church, the Gallican, though not better off, was acted on in a very different manner.
From Project Gutenberg
He was instantly attacked for his Gallican panegyric, by a portion of the Royal Society.
From Project Gutenberg
Lewis could not have taken his advice without surrendering his own main object, the restoration of the Gallican Church.
From Project Gutenberg
To insular minds, whether Scottish or English, every deviation of the Gallican ritual from their own was a sore vexation.
From Project Gutenberg
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